This is a stupid question. But,Mostly the same. Some--Michigan/NYU/Harvard come to mind--will have a small, usually handwritten, addendum. Remember, most places call now, so that's where the fluff comes in.

They're usually the same form letter. Some deans write notes on the letter with more personal stuff. I got a few notes from deans in the T14 acknowledging some personal things in my résumé and app. I can't imagine any schools writing individual letters for every student.

ManOfTheMinute wrote:Its actually a mad lib... they fill in the adjectives and nouns differently based on the strength of each applicant.

Dear Manoftheminute,

Congrats! Based on the ehhh strength of your application, we are drunk to offer you admission to Cooley's Part-Time Law Program. We hope you are as tubthumped as us and that we will see you in the fall to join us as a cashcow for the class of 20,000.

ManOfTheMinute wrote:Its actually a mad lib... they fill in the adjectives and nouns differently based on the strength of each applicant.

Dear Manoftheminute,

Congrats! Based on the ehhh strength of your application, we are drunk to offer you admission to Cooley's Part-Time Law Program. We hope you are as tubthumped as us and that we will see you in the fall to join us as a cashcow for the class of 20,000.

ManOfTheMinute wrote:Its actually a mad lib... they fill in the adjectives and nouns differently based on the strength of each applicant.

Dear Manoftheminute,

Congrats! Based on the ehhh strength of your application, we are drunk to offer you admission to Cooley's Part-Time Law Program. We hope you are as tubthumped as us and that we will see you in the fall to join us as a cashcow for the class of 20,000.

ManOfTheMinute wrote:Its actually a mad lib... they fill in the adjectives and nouns differently based on the strength of each applicant.

Dear Manoftheminute,

Congrats! Based on the ehhh strength of your application, we are drunk to offer you admission to Cooley's Part-Time Law Program. We hope you are as tubthumped as us and that we will see you in the fall to join us as a cashcow for the class of 20,000.

ManOfTheMinute wrote:Its actually a mad lib... they fill in the adjectives and nouns differently based on the strength of each applicant.

Dear Manoftheminute,

Congrats! Based on the ehhh strength of your application, we are drunk to offer you admission to Cooley's Part-Time Law Program. We hope you are as tubthumped as us and that we will see you in the fall to join us as a cashcow for the class of 20,000.

The madlib thing was funny. But in all seriousness: if you guys thought I initially meant "a different letter for each and every applicant" that's just ridiculous.

Realistically, it's possible that schools have two or three templates instead of just one. There's perhaps one for a really attractive applicant whose scholarship offer is 2/3 or more. There's perhaps another one for just a regular admit with no scholarship money offered. I mean... this isn't that far-fetched.

Sure, they may have different letters based on different levels of aid. But only if they actually talk about the aid in the letter (and it would probably consist of cutting-and-pasting the scholarship paragraphs from some master file into the form acceptance letter). I don't think you can try to read the tea leaves to gauge what the school might be going to give you based on language in an acceptance letter that doesn't give scholarship info - that's way too complicated.

(And if you think this thread is snarky I don't think you've read very much of this site...)

The madlib thing was funny. But in all seriousness: if you guys thought I initially meant "a different letter for each and every applicant" that's just ridiculous.

Realistically, it's possible that schools have two or three templates instead of just one. There's perhaps one for a really attractive applicant whose scholarship offer is 2/3 or more. There's perhaps another one for just a regular admit with no scholarship money offered. I mean... this isn't that far-fetched.

ManOfTheMinute wrote:Its actually a mad lib... they fill in the adjectives and nouns differently based on the strength of each applicant.

Dear Manoftheminute,

Congrats! Based on the ehhh strength of your application, we are drunk to offer you admission to Cooley's Part-Time Law Program. We hope you are as tubthumped as us and that we will see you in the fall to join us as a cashcow for the class of 20,000.

Regrettably,

A Rich Boomer wearing MoonBoots

Wow, that was just as fun as I thought it would be.

Hahahahah exactly what I had in mind! This looks awfully similar to my NYU letter...

The madlib thing was funny. But in all seriousness: if you guys thought I initially meant "a different letter for each and every applicant" that's just ridiculous.

Realistically, it's possible that schools have two or three templates instead of just one. There's perhaps one for a really attractive applicant whose scholarship offer is 2/3 or more. There's perhaps another one for just a regular admit with no scholarship money offered. I mean... this isn't that far-fetched.

UtilityMonster wrote:I got YP'd at a school and I'm pretty sure most students did not get a letter detailing how grades/LSAT are not the only factor taken into consideration.

Alright I'm starting to get it now. I don't blame you all... you're all ascending to a profession where the gatekeepers (law schools) are themselves saying one thing and doing another (with regards to the inclusivity-tinged content of their acceptance letters and the actual basis for admission).

One of my acceptance letters had a post-it note from the dean of admissions saying she enjoyed reading about my journey to law school and looked forward to speaking in the future. I think the actual letter itself was pretty standard though.

UtilityMonster wrote:I got YP'd at a school and I'm pretty sure most students did not get a letter detailing how grades/LSAT are not the only factor taken into consideration.

Alright I'm starting to get it now. I don't blame you all... you're all ascending to a profession where the gatekeepers (law schools) are themselves saying one thing and doing another (with regards to the inclusivity-tinged content of their acceptance letters and the actual basis for admission).